Wednesday, 2 March 2016

Steve Ballmer's Final Letter To Shareholders As CEO 'Of The Company I Love'

Steve Ballmer's Final Letter To Shareholders As CEO 'Of The Company I Love'

Steve Ballmer's long, slow good-bye to all things Microsoft continued on Monday afternoon when he published "the last shareholder letter I will write as the CEO of the company I love."
In it, he tried to sell shareholders again on his vision for the company. This includes his major reorganization last summer, the value of Bing, a justification for buying Skype for $8.6 billion in 2011 and for buying Nokia's device business for $7 billion last month.

The letter was published with Microsoft's annual report.

It's Ballmer's latest in a long string of good-byes as he prepares to retire from the CEO job. Always an emotional guy, in recent weeks, Ballmer wept through his final speech to 13,000 Microsoft staffers; talked about how weird it was to come to work these days and opened up about his biggest regrets.

Here's the letter:

TO OUR SHAREHOLDERS, CUSTOMERS, PARTNERS AND EMPLOYEES:

This is a unique letter for me - the last shareholder letter I will write as the CEO of the company I love. We have always believed that technology will unleash human potential and that is why I have come to work every day with a heart full of passion for more than 30 years.

Fiscal Year 2013 was a pivotal year for Microsoft in every sense of the word.

Last year in my letter to you I declared a fundamental shift in our business to a devices and services company. This transformation impacts how we run the company, how we develop new experiences, and how we take products to market for both consumers and businesses.

This past year we took the first big bold steps forward in our transformation and we did it while growing revenue to $77.8 billion (up 6 percent). In addition, we returned $12.3 billion (up 15 percent) to shareholders through dividends and stock repurchases. While we were able to grow revenue to a record level, our earnings results reflect investments as well as some of the challenges of undertaking a transformation of this magnitude.

With this as backdrop, I'd like to summarize where we are now and where we're headed, because it helps explain why I'm so enthusiastic about the opportunity ahead.

Our strategy: High-value activities enabled by a family of devices and services

We are still in the early days of our transformation, yet we made strong progress in the past year launching devices and services that people love and businesses need. We brought Windows 8 to the world; we brought consistent user experiences to PCs, tablets, phones and Xbox; and we made important advancements to Windows Server, Windows Azure, Microsoft Dynamics and Office 365. We are proud of what we accomplished this year and continue to be passionate about delivering better devices and services more quickly.

To increase innovation, capability, efficiency and speed we further sharpened our strategy, and in July 2013 we announced we are rallying behind a single strategy as One Microsoft. We declared that Microsoft's focus going forward will be to create a family of devices and services for individuals and businesses that empower people around the globe at home, at work and on the go, for the activities they value most.

Over time, our focus on high-value activities will generate amazing innovation and new areas of growth. What is a high-value activity? Think of the experiences people have every day that are most important to them - from communicating with a family member and researching a term paper to having serious fun and expressing ideas. In a business setting, high-value activities include experiences such as conducting meetings with colleagues in multiple locations, gaining insight from massive amounts of data and information, and interacting with customers.

Microsoft will enable these types of high-value activities with a family of devices - from both Microsoft and our partners - as well as with our services.

As we go to market, we will primarily monetize our high-value activities by leading with devices and enterprise services. In this model, our consumer services such as Bing and Skype will differentiate our devices and serve as an on-ramp to our enterprise services while generating some revenue from subscriptions and advertising. Enterprise services continue to be an area of great strength, growth and opportunity as businesses of all sizes look to Microsoft to help them move to the cloud, manage a growing number of devices, tap into big data and embrace new social capabilities.

Executing and accelerating

In the past year we took many bold steps forward in executing on our strategy.

First, we are well underway in implementing the new organization structure announced in July. The teams are working together in new and exciting ways. The key change we made is deceptively simple but profoundly powerful: Instead of organizing our teams around individual products, we've organized by function, including, for example, engineering, sales, marketing and finance. It ensures we have one strategy and work as one team with one set of shared goals.

Second, in September we announced we are purchasing Nokia's Devices and Services business - including its smartphone and mobile phone businesses; award-winning engineering and design teams; manufacturing and assembly facilities around the world; and teams devoted to operations, sales, marketing and support. This is a signature event in our transformation and will bring together the best mobile device work of Microsoft and Nokia. It will accelerate our growth with Windows Phone while strengthening our overall device ecosystem and our opportunity.

Third, in September, we also announced a new segment-reporting framework. We have five new reporting segments tightly aligned with our focus on delivering innovative devices and services for both our enterprise and consumer customers. This framework was designed to give valuable insight into our progress in the key transformations we are undertaking in our businesses to drive long-term growth.

As I think about what's ahead, I'm incredibly optimistic about what Microsoft will deliver. We are accelerating as we bring to market Windows 8.1 PCs and tablets with our partners, Surface 2, Xbox One and new phones; advance our enterprise services including Windows Server, Windows Azure, Microsoft Dynamics and Office 365; and innovate on new high-value activities.

Moving forward

With the decisions we've made this year, the strategy we've put in place, the organization we've designed, the world-class talent we have, and the devices and services we are creating, we are well-positioned to deliver growth and world-changing technology long into the future.

We have seen incredible results in the past decade - delivering more than $200 billion in operating profit. I'm optimistic not only as the CEO but as an investor who treasures his Microsoft stock.

Working at Microsoft has been a thrilling experience - we've changed the world and delivered record-setting success - and I know our best days are still ahead.

Thank you for your support.

Steven A. Ballmer
Chief Executive Officer
September 27, 2013

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

vivo Xplay5 with 5.43-inch Quad HD display, 6GB RAM, Snapdragon 820 announced

vivo Xplay5 with 5.43-inch Quad HD display, 6GB RAM, Snapdragon 820 announced
vivo has announced Xplay5, the company’s flagship smartphone as it had promised . It comes in two variants, one with 6GB of RAM and Snapdragon 820 SoC, while the other variant has 4GB of RAM and Octa-Core Snapdragon 652 SoC. Other specifications are similar, including a 5.43-inch dual curved edge Quad HD Super AMOLED display with Corning Gorilla glass protection, 16-megapixel rear camera with Phase Detection Auto Focus (PDAF) for focus speed of just 0.1 seconds and a 8-megapixel front-facing camera.
It has full metal body, fingerprint sensor on the back that can unlock the phone in just 0.4 seconds, dual SIM support and 3600mAh battery with dual-charging chip for fast charging. The Xplay5 has CS4398 DAC amplifier and AD8397 and the Xplay5 high-end version has ES9028 DAC and TI’s OPA1612 amplifier for better audio output.
vivo Xplay5 specifications
5.43-inch (2560 x 1440 pixels) Quad HD Super AMOLED dual curved edge display with Corning Gorilla glass protection
Quad-Core Snapdragon 820 64-bit processor with Adreno 530 GPU / Octa-Core Snapdragon 652 processor with Adreno 510 GPU
6GB DDR4 RAM / 4GB DDR4 RAM, 128GB internal storage
Android 6.0 (Marshmallow)
Dual SIM
16MP rear camera with dual-tone LED flash, f/2.0 aperture, Sony IMX298 sensor, PDAF
8MP front-facing camera, f/2.4 aperture
Fingerprint sensor
Dimensions: 153.5X76.2X7.59mm; Weight: 167.8g
4G LTE, WiFi 802.11 ac (2.4GHz and 5GHz), Bluetooth 4.1, GPS
3600mAh battery
The vivo Xplay5 comes in Champagne Gold and Rose Gold colors. The vivo Xplay5 Ultimate Edition with 6GB RAM with Snapdragon 820 SoC is priced at 4288 Yuan (US$ 654 / Rs. 44,400 approx.), while the 4GB RAM with Snapdragon 652 variant is priced at 3698 Yuan (US$ 564 / Rs. 38,310 approx.) and is available for order starting from March 8 and ships from March 16th.

North Korea to boycott UN rights council: Foreign minister

North Korea to boycott UN rights council: Foreign minister

'We shall no longer participate in international sessions singling out the human rights situation of (North Korea) for mere political attack,' Ri said.North Korea will boycott the UN Human Rights Council, Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong said on Tuesday deploring the “politicisation” of the body.
“We shall no longer participate in international sessions singling out the human rights situation of (North Korea) for mere political attack,” Ri told the council, charging it was plagued by “politicisation, selectivity and double standards.”
The UN’s top rights body has repeatedly slammed the situation in North Korea, with a massive 2014 report charging the country and its leadership were guilty of a wide range of crimes against humanity.

But Ri insisted Tuesday that the United States and others who have long yearned for the “elimination of the DPRK” (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) were using false allegations of human rights abuses to boost their cause.
He charged they were driving a “human rights racket” against the country.
They were offering more than $5,000 (4,600 euros) to “so-called North Korean defectors” to get them to “fabricate” shocking testimony about the situation in the country, Ri said.
He also claimed that Pyongyang’s enemies were dangling promises of economic aid to entice UN member countries to adopt resolutions on human rights in North Korea.
“In other words, the voting process at the international human rights mechanisms is being commercialised,” Ri said.
North Korea would no longer take part in the process, he said, stressing that from now on, “whether or not such resolutions are to be put to a vote will be none of our business and we will never be bound by them.”
Later Tuesday, the UN Security Council in New York is due to vote on a US-drafted resolution imposing a raft of new sanctions on North Korea following its recent nuclear test and rocket launch.